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OF NOTE

Finale and Sibelius tips and tutorials by music notation expert Robert Puff

Finale : Feathered Beams in Cross-Sta


Notation
Posted on 09/25/2012 by Robert Pu
Feathered Beams in Finale are straightforward to create in a single staff (see this tutorial).

However, creating feathered beams in a grand sta with cross-staff notation is a little more
involved, so it seems like an excellent topic.
In this tutorial, well examine several methods for creating cross-staff feathered beaming in Finale.
Thanks to Peter Thomsen, Luke Dahn and Zuill for their contributions to this tutorial, and a shout
out to Alexander Blank at Indiana University for bringing us all together on the OF NOTE blog!
A basic problem that occurs when creating cross-staff beaming in combination with feathered
beams is that the feathered beams change width over their duration, but the stems remain at a
constant length. We wind up with some stems at an inappropriate length, sticking out from under
the beam:

METHOD 1 contributed by Zuill

1) Enter the notes in either staff, then use the Note Mover Tool to select specific notes and move
them into the opposite staff.
2) Use the Secondary Beam Angle tool in Special Tools to create the feathered beam.
3) Hide the errant stems by masking the stem portions that stick over the beam. Create a new
Staff Attached Text Expression with an opaque enclosure to do this.
This text expression can be a space character, but a text character isnt necessarily required
here. The Enclosure Designer itself defines the masked area, and has a number of options for
creating a specific shape (e.g. diamond or triangle) and / or fixed size which can help you avoid
the beams themselves:

For more information, see Create White Space Where Text & Barlines Intersect.

METHOD 2 contributed by Peter Thomsen

1) Enter the notes in the lower staff, then, use the Secondary Beam Angle tool in Special Tools to
create the feathered beam.

2) Copy the contents of the lower staff into the upper staff. Adjust pitches as needed, and hide
accidentals.

3) In the upper staff, using the Beam Width tool in Special Tools, set the beam width to zero.

4) In the lower staff, reverse the stemming in the last note in each beamed group.

5) Use the Custom Stem tool in Special Tools to replace un-needed stems with an empty shape.

6) Use the Note Shape tool in Special Tools to replace un-needed noteheads with a space
character (slot 32).

7) Finally in the upper staff, adjust the beam angle.

METHOD 3 contributed by Peter Thomsen

1) Create the first beam group in the lower staff as in Method 2, using the Secondary Beam
Angle tool in Special Tools to set the feathered beam angles. Then, using the Note Mover Tool,
select specific notes in the lower staff to move them into the treble staff.

2) Break the beams at the end of the second beam group to move the last pair of notes (in
Speedy Note, break the beam at the cursor point with the / key on the keypad).

3) As you did in the first half of the bar (step 1 above), use the Note Mover Tool to select this
separated group of notes in the lower staff, and move them to the treble staff.

4) Use the Beam Width tool in Special Tools to set the beam width of the cross-staff notes to
zero.

5) Lock the systems, apply music spacing and update the layout.

6) Adjust beam angle of the cross-staff notes.

7) Finally, in the lower staff, use the Beam Extension tool in Special Tools to lengthen the feathered
beam.

METHOD 4 contributed by Luke Dahn

Finally, this PDF walkthrough from composer Luke Dahn outlines a series of steps for yet another
solution. This solution takes advantage of the fact that (a) A tuplet of virtually any ratio can be
created in Finale and (b) the stems on quarter notes can be individually lengthened or shortened
to the proper length relative to the feathered beam.
Id like to hear from you. Do you have a solution for cross-staff feathered beaming that isnt
covered here? (I know, right?)

Thanks for reading! Thats it thats all there is to it.


~robert

Related Posts:
1. Creating Tone Clusters in Finale, part 1
2. Creating Fractions & Other Symbols in Finale & Sibelius using Unicode
3. Aleatoric Elements : From Boxed to Out of the Box Notation In Finale
4. Finale: Use Percussion Pictographs for Sta Names or Instrument Changes
This entry was posted in Finale, Note Mover, Special tools, Tuplets and tagged alternate
notation, editing, graphics by Robert Pu. Bookmark the permalink
[http://www.rpmseattle.com/of_note/finale-feathered-beams-in-cross-sta-notation/] .
5 THOUGHTS ON FINALE : FEATHERED BEAMS IN CROSS-STAFF NOTATION

Matthew Maslanka
on 09/26/2012 at 1:24 am said:

Excellent walk through. I will suggest a nicety to enhance your cross-staff notation:
unless the notes in the cross-staff beamed passage are going to line up with another part,
it looks far better to align the stems evenly (or in the appropriate accelerating spacing)
rather than the note heads.
At the very least, back-to-back stems should be pulled apart and head-to-head stems
should be drawn together.

David Ross
on 09/26/2012 at 8:17 am said:

Very interesting. Luke Dahls method is the most sophisticated, but they all share the
problem (in Sibelius, too) that the stems [] should be equidistant. SCORE takes care of
this with with its STUD (Stems Up And Down) command which renders the problem
moot.
I use a Mac, and I use the program Ruler to measure the distance between the first stem
and the last, and it will allow me to step guide lines at certain intervals (after one has done
the math to find the difference and divide by the number of stems). I can then, for
example, in Sibelius, align a notes stem with the guidelines using the Inspector. Its a real

pain and time-consuming, but the results look so much better. Is there a better way?
Best,
David

David Ross
on 09/26/2012 at 8:21 am said:

Hi,
Id also like to find out some ideas about making the stems equidistant in normal stems
up and down situations.
Thanks,
David

Robert Puff
on 09/26/2012 at 10:51 am said:

Yes, great point, Matthew. Thank you. If we are staying within Special Tools, a further
step for any of these methods would be to use the Note Position tool to manually move
the stems appropriately.
~robert

Robert Puff
on 09/26/2012 at 11:09 am said:

Yes, you are absolutely correct, David. Thank you. A further finesse to any of these
methods would be to adjust the distance between stems; either so they are equidistant,
or, as Matthew states in his comment, stems that show appropriately accelerating
spacing relative to the feathered beams.

As you point out, in Sibelius, you can manually adjust the distance between stems using
the Properties Panel (v6) or Inspector (v7). For equidistant stems, Ive found that if I
highlight all of the notes (except the first or the last depending on which side of the beam
you are on) on one side of the beam, I can use the little arrow on the X offset in properties
/ inspector to change the positioning gradually e.g. the stems slide over together until
they appear the same distance apart. In Finale, its a similar proposition; the Note Position
tool in Special tools allows individual manual adjustment of the the stem and associated
notehead.
But you are absolutely right; it certainly isnt automated in either Finale or Sibelius.
~robert

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